Etienne verhaegen biography of barack
Terlinden
Noble family
The Terlinden family is a Belgian noble family of German origin, with a noble offspring in Belgium. Its titles are Viscount and Baron.
History
The origin of the family Terlinden lies in the town of Rheinberg in the Rhine valley, where its members fulfilled duties of responsibility, from the fourteenth century on.
Around 1580, the local ruler, archbishop of Cologne, abjured the catholic faith and embraced the Luteran belief. Cornelius Terlinden decided to flee the country and settled in Antwerp. After a few years he moved to Alost, where he became a brewer and was also appointed as an alderman. He was succeeded by his son, Imbrecht Terlinden. In 1676 king Charles II of Spain granted hereditary nobility to Cornelius Terlinden (?-1691), a son of Imbrecht Terlinden and Jeanne de Smet. He became alderman of Alost and general collector for Alost and the Alost area, and also for Grammont and the Grammont area. He was succeeded in these offices by three generations Terlinden.
At the beginning of the nineteenth century, Charles Terlinden married in Ghent and lived there. His sons, Charles and Prosper Terlinden, settled in Brussels and founded two distinct branches. The first was recognized within Belgian nobility in 1874, the second in 1900. The third son, Jules, also settled in Brussels, did not ask for nobility recognition and had no descendants.
Genealogy
- Cornelius Terlinden († ca. 1535), alderman and mayor of Rheinberg.
- Thielman Terlinden († ca. 1597), alderman of Rheinberg.
- Cornelius Terlinden (ca. 1550-1614), x Gertrude Stevens. The couple fled to Antwerp around 1580 in order to remain within the catholic faith. In 1592 they moved to Alost, where Cornelius was active as a brewer and became an alderman in 1610.
- Imbrecht Terlinden (†1645), brewer, x Jeanne de Smet. They had eleven children.
- Cornelius Terlinden (ca.1610? - 1691), alderman of Alost, general tax collector for Alost and its reg
- A documentary series with a broad
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- The Terlinden family is a Belgian
- Problems like poor air
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Item f.98v - Portrait print of Pierre Théodore Verhaegen
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MCOL/Van de Weyer Albums/Album 3/f.98v
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Portrait print of Pierre Théodore Verhaegen
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Van de Weyer, Jean Sylvain (1802-1874), diplomat
(19 January 1802 – 23 May 1874)
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Van de Weyer served as Belgium’s Prime minister from July 1845 to March 1846. However, he lived for the majority of his life in London (17 Fitzroy Square, 50 Portland Place) and Windsor (New Lodge), and held the office of Belgian Minister at the Court of St. James’s under Queen Victoria, an ambassadorial role. Van de Weyer was close friends with Lord Palmerston. In addition to being a member of the Roxburghe Club, Van de Weyer was a founder member of the Philobiblon Society, the Vice President of the London Library, a Member of the Société des Bibliophiles de Belgique and the Head of the Royal Library of Brussels.
Pierre Henri Laurent said of Van de Weyer: 'His manners, taste, and savoir-faire brought him into the vital center of the intellectual, diplomatic, and financial communities. His home became the meeting place of writers, artists, and scientists’.Content and structure area
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- Imbrecht Terlinden (†1645), brewer, x Jeanne de Smet. They had eleven children.
- Cornelius Terlinden (ca. 1550-1614), x Gertrude Stevens. The couple fled to Antwerp around 1580 in order to remain within the catholic faith. In 1592 they moved to Alost, where Cornelius was active as a brewer and became an alderman in 1610.
- Thielman Terlinden († ca. 1597), alderman of Rheinberg.